What the question is asking, I believe, is what will best communicate the idea and persuade people the most.
The answer, I believe is the picture of the sweaty, dirty, exahusted children in coal mines.
The first choice doesn't work, obviously, because there is nothing mentioned about child labor.
The second choice works word wise, but it has no visual. You are also hearing it through someone else's words, as if third person.
The fifth choice would be correct, BUT the fourth choice is better. With the fifth, you see children working. That's sad. But, with the fourth, you not only see the children working, but tired, exahusted, and dirty. That truly communicates how horrible child labor is.
Hope I helped.
Complete Question:
Read the excerpt from "Healthy Eating."
If anything gets in the way of our good eating, it's lifestyle. When you get home from work late, why spend an hour in front of the stove when you can spend two minutes at the microwave? And doesn't that oatmeal box claim to be a good source of calcium for our kids, never mind the small print listing 14 grams of sugar?
Which statement best describes the author's argument in this part of the article?
Answer:
Living a busy life affects healthy eating
Explanation:
The author argues that going through an easier way of doing things ( especially meal preparation) promotes healthy eating. The author discourages a busy cooking habit that can affect timeliness in taking meals. This is evident from the statement, " When you get home from work late, why spend an hour in front of the stove when you can spend two minutes at the microwave?"
Answer: In traditional Japanese aesthetics, wabi-sabi is a world view centered on the acceptance of transience and imperfection. The aesthetic is sometimes described as one of appreciating beauty that is "imperfect, impermanent, and incomplete" in nature.
Explanation: Hope it helps! :)
Do his job at the high quality level as others except from him.I doubt that ethics exists at any professional work.